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A Place To Belong – let’s help local youth services do even more to tackle loneliness by Co-op Foundation

29 Aug 2018 - 14:27 by michelle.foster

The Co-op Foundation funded research by UK Youth, a national charity who provide a collective voice for local youth organisations. The results of this have been released with the report A Place To Belong. Coop Foundation

“Loneliness isn’t a word they’d use, it’s something we see.”

Youth workers see loneliness as a widespread issue for young people - 82% of them agree with this. But they also recognise the barriers young people face to talking about feeling lonely. 73% of youth workers say young people don’t actively seek help with this issue.
This reinforces what the Co-op Foundation found in previous research into young people’s own views and experiences of loneliness. Despite being a common experience, young people often feel uncomfortable admitting feeling lonely, worrying how others will react.

The Co-op Foundation have already started looking at how they can address this. The Co-op Foundation #iwill Fund is supporting projects that break down the ‘invisible wall’ of stigma about loneliness, and create more opportunities for mutual peer support.

Youth workers, by building trusting relationships with young people, can work with them sensitively to explore ‘difficult’ topics like loneliness. But just as this can be challenging for young people, A Place to Belong reveals that many youth workers themselves could also need help to engage with this subject more confidently.

“It is difficult to address loneliness… I have worked with members of staff who feel awkward to approach this topic with a young person”

Half of youth workers believe a lack of training is a barrier to tackling loneliness. As one of them told UK Youth’s researchers, “You don’t know what you’re going to unleash, and if you’re not confident...maybe you’re better leaving it alone”.

These concerns reflect the fact that although a common experience, on an individual level loneliness can be linked to a web of complex personal issues, from family breakdown to mental health.

This feeds into many of UK Youth’s recommendations, which include:
• Improved training and resources for youth workers
• Ongoing support for a network to share ideas and experiences
• Better links between youth organisations and local education and health services, to provide more joined-up support and access to specialist help when needed

The Co-op Foundation are keen to help address these needs, so in partnership with the UK Government they will be using part of the new £2 million Building Connections Fund youth strand to develop resources to increase the confidence and capabilities of all youth organisations to tackle loneliness.

“We need to bring young people to the forefront of the debate - they need to be involved in this discussion.”

It’s clear from UK Youth's research that many youth organisations are already doing great work to tackle loneliness. Part of what makes youth work so successful is that it starts with what young people want to do with their lives, and offers flexible and informal help for them to take positive steps forward.

This empowering, youth-centred approach needs to run through all efforts to tackle youth loneliness. Well-run and sustainably funded youth organisations with trained and capable staff and volunteers are vital - but the most effective solutions will be those that are shaped by young people themselves.

The Co-op Foundation grants through the Building Connections Fund will help youth organisations build on what is already working well, by working with young people to design innovations and improvements in their services.

The Co-op Foundation encourage any youth organisations who consider applying to the Building Connections Fund to read A Place to Belong, and discuss with your staff, volunteers and young people how these findings relate to their own experience and insights into youth loneliness. How might you be able to build on what you’re already doing, and help young people shape even more effective ways of tackling this issue?

For further information, visit: https://blog.coopfoundation.org.uk/index.php/2018/08/09/research-blog/

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